Florida Department of CorrectionsJulie L. Jones, Secretary

Community Supervision Overview:
Defining the Types of Supervision

Community supervision in Florida is provided to adult offenders who are sentenced to a supervision type imposed by: a
criminal court,the Florida Parole Commission, or a contractual agreement between the State Attorney’s Office, the offender,
and the Florida Department of Corrections. There are 2,556 Correctional Probation Officers responsible for the supervision
of over 158,000 offenders under community supervision in Florida. Community supervision includes monitoring and
enforcing standard and special conditions imposed by the court or Florida Parole Commission; referring offenders to community
resources for assistance with job placement, treatment, education, or other need; conducting drug tests to monitor
for substance abuse, using electronic monitoring to monitor whereabouts of offenders, reporting violations to the court or
Florida Parole Commission; and using other specialized supervision approaches. The following is a brief overview of the
types of supervision that comprise this area of the Florida Department of Corrections.

Contractual Agreement

Pretrial Intervention

Pretrial Intervention is a type of supervision intended for
first time non-violent offenders. Any first offender, or any
person previously convicted of not more than one nonviolent
misdemeanor, who is charged with any misdemeanor or
felony of a third degree, is eligible for release to the pretrial
intervention program. Consent must be obtained from
the victim, the state attorney, and in some jurisdictions, as
in the case of Drug Courts, the judge. The offender signs a
contract, agreeing to certain terms and conditions of supervision.
If the offender completes the program successfully,
charges are dropped. If the offender does not comply with
the terms of the contract, his/her case is referred back to the
State Attorney for further prosecution.

Requirements are similar in the Drug Offender Pretrial
Intervention Program, except the offense can be a second
or third degree felony for purchase or possession of a controlled
substance under Chapter 893; prostitution; tampering
with evidence; solicitation for purchase of a controlled
substance; or obtaining a prescription by fraud. Drug
Offender Pretrial Intervention is often used by judges as a
type of supervision imposed for first time offenders with a
substance abuse problem

Court Imposed

Probation

Probation is a court-ordered term of community supervision
under specified conditions for a specific period of time
that cannot exceed the maximum sentence for the offense.
It is the most common type of community supervision. The
offender on probation is required to abide by all conditions
ordered by the court. Offenders on probation must comply
with standard conditions of supervision, including but not
limited to: no violations of the law, monthly reporting requirements,
not changing residence or employment or leaving
the county without the consent of the probation officer,
submitting to random drug testing and searches, and paying
cost of supervision. The sentencing judge will often impose
special conditions of supervision, including but not limited
to: substance abuse or mental health treatment, victim
restitution, and community service hours. Non-compliance
or ‘violation’ of any of these conditions, either by committing
another crime or through a technical violation like
failing to complete substance abuse treatment, may result in
modification of the sentence or revocation by the court and
imposition of any sentence that it might have imposed when
originally placing the offender on probation.

Drug Offender Probation

Drug Offender Probation is a more intensive form of
supervision, which emphasizes treatment of drug offenders
and monitoring of offenders’ substance abuse through field
supervision, contact with treatment providers, and random
drug testing. Offenders on Drug Offender Probation have
all the standard conditions of supervision imposed, along
with any special conditions the court deems necessary due
to the offender’s substance abuse history, including but not
limited to: inpatient or outpatient substance abuse treatment,
increased frequency of drug testing, and sometimes curfews.

Sex Offender Probation

Sex Offender Probation is an intensive form of supervision
which emphasizes sex offender treatment and close monitoring
in the field to ensure compliance with sex offender
conditions of supervision and sex offender registration
requirements. Abbreviated versions of the standard sex offender
conditions of supervision include:

Mandatory curfews from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.;

If the victim was under 18, a prohibition of living within
1,000 feet of a school, day care center, park, playground,
or other place where children regularly congregate;

Active participation in and successful completion of a sex
offender treatment program;

Prohibition of any contact with the victim;

If victim under 18, no unsupervised contact with a child
under 18;

If victim under 18, a prohibition of working for pay or as
a volunteer at any place where children regularly congregate;

Prohibited from viewing, owning or possessing any
obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or
auditory material;

Make restitution;

Submission to warrantless search of person, residence or
vehicle;

Participation at least annually in polygraph examinations;

Maintenance of a driving log and prohibition against
driving a motor vehicle alone without the prior approval
of the supervising officers;

Prohibition of using a post office box; and

If there was sexual contact, a submission to an HIV test,
at the probationer’s expense.

For more detailed descriptions of the sex offender standard
conditions of supervision, please refer to Section 948.30,
Florida Statutes.

Community Control

Community Control is a form of intensive supervised
“house arrest,” including surveillance, on weekends and
holidays. The offender is restricted to his/her residence,
with the exception of being allowed to work, attend treatment,
visit the probation office, and limited other occasions
that must be approved in advance by the community
control officer. As with probation, violation of any community
control condition may result in revocation by the court
and imposition of any sentence that it might have imposed
before placing the offender on community control supervision.
Many of the offenders who are placed on community
control are prison diversions.

Post-Prison Release

Parole

Parole is a post-prison supervision program where eligible
inmates have the terms and conditions of parole set by
the Florida Parole Commission, an agency separate from
the Florida Department of Corrections. The period of
parole cannot exceed the balance of the offender’s original
sentence. Under parole, the offender is to be supervised in
the community under specific conditions imposed by the
Florida Parole Commission. Parole supervision is provided
by correctional probation officers who work for the Florida
Department of Corrections. Only offenders sentenced for
offenses committed prior to October 1, 1983 can be eligible
for parole, as it was abolished for all offenses committed after
that date. Even so, there are still about 5,000 inmates in
prison who remain eligible for parole. Parole violations are
reported by probation officers to the Florida Parole Commission,
which makes the final determination whether to
continue the offender on supervision, modify the conditions
of supervision, or revoke the supervision and return
the offender to prison.

Conditional Release

An inmate sentenced to murder/manslaughter, sexual offenses,
robbery or other violent personal crimes, and who
has a previous commitment to a state or federal institution
or has been convicted as a Habitual Offender or Sexual
Predator, meets the criteria for conditional release. Upon
reaching their release date with accrued gaintime, an
inmate is placed on conditional release to serve up to the
remainder of the length of sentence. The Florida Parole
Commission imposes the conditions of supervision on
offenders released to conditional release supervision. Supervision
is provided by the Florida Department of Corrections’
probation officers. Conditional release violations are
reported by probation officers to the Florida Parole Commission,
which makes the final determination whether to
continue the offender on supervision, modify the conditions
of supervision, or revoke the supervision and return
the offender to prison.

Addiction Recovery

Addiction Recovery Supervision is a form of supervision
for an offender released from a state correctional facility,
convicted of a crime committed on or after July 1, 2001,
when the offender has:

a history of substance abuse or a substance addiction;

participated in any drug treatment;

no current or previous convictions for a violent offense;
or

no current or previous convictions for: drug trafficking;
unlawful sale of a controlled substance; or property
offense, except for passing worthless checks, forgery,
uttering, or counterfeiting, third degree felony grand theft
(excluding a theft relating to firearm), third degree felony
burglary of an unoccupied structure or conveyance; or a
traffic offense involving injury or death.

The Florida Parole Commission imposes the conditions of
supervision on offenders released to Addiction Recovery
Supervision, which include substance abuse treatment and
random drug testing to monitor substance abuse. Supervision
is provided by the Florida Department of Corrections’
probation officers. Addiction Recovery Supervision
violations are reported by probation officers to the Florida
Parole Commission, which makes the final determination
whether to continue the offender on supervision, modify
the conditions of supervision, or revoke the supervision
and return the offender to prison.